8

Vivienne fought in vain against the ropes binding her ankles. The smooth, stone altar was covered in velvet, soft and cushioning beneath her, but she was tied up, like a sacrifice in a horrid novel.

She felt furious at her nakedness, so angry she could almost forget to be afraid.

Candles flickered as the vampire who called himself Adder dropped his cloak, exposing his nakedness. He had exactly the sort of male body she hated. One that spoke of power, dominance, the ability to inflict pain. Thick muscles, an oxlike chest, and big shoulders.

A whimper escaped her. Instinct warned her he did not intend to let her go.

“You are the one,” he said softly. “You were made to be the ultimate weapon against men.” He leered at her, then his eyes gleamed with zeal and horrible arousal. “What I take from you will make me as powerful as a god.”

She wanted to vomit.

She wasn’t a weapon. How could she be? She was strapped to a stone table and powerless.

But that’s what the woman had told her, the woman who had painted all the designs on her while four men had held her down. That she was the most powerful of her kind. That her voluptuous body had been made to tempt men and lure them to their deaths. That she’d been made like this—curvaceous and pretty—to be evil.

Adder grinned as he approached. She couldn’t bear to look down at his thick erection, red-tipped, a true beast. He moved with pride, obviously impressed with the clublike thing between his thighs.

She couldn’t let this monster win.

She could buck and try to fight. Bite him. But she knew in her soul that she wasn’t going to escape.

I’m so sorry, Sarah. She’d seen what was on the pedestal beside the one that held the cup. A dagger, with shining blade and silver handle. She was going to die tied up and naked, because she was some kind of monster….

Think, Vivienne. It didn’t matter what she was. She was all Sarah had.

The men in the room began chanting. It was a horrible, mournful sound. Adder grinned evilly, then bent and kissed the toes of her right foot. She tried to jerk away. But she couldn’t, and he moved to her left foot and suckled. His gentle touch was a lie. She could see the gloating anticipation in his silvery eyes. He held his cock within his right fist, slowly working his hand up and down the thick shaft. He murmured words, soft words that flowed in her head and took control of her.

Then she knew the truth of this nightmare. The drink she’d been given. The incantation Adder was speaking. The words fired up the horrible, uncontrollable lust the drink had caused.

“Don’t touch me.” She had to force the words out. “I’ll kill you just as I’ve killed many, many other men.” It was an empty threat. If she had actually killed men, she had no idea how she’d done it.

Adder held up one of his enormous hands. She’d seen bears in a menagerie, and his hands were bigger than those beasts’ paws. The chanting stopped. His thick lips curved into an ugly smile. “Those were mortal men. You let Lord Blackmoor pound himself into you, and it didn’t touch him at all. It won’t hurt me, for I am undead.”

He knew. Knew she had been Heath’s lover. But how could he know? Had Heath been tortured to tell? Or was it worse—had he betrayed her? Had he not been “captured” after all? Maybe he hadn’t been destroyed. Perhaps he didn’t give a fig for her or Sarah because he still believed she had hurt his brother—

“I wouldn’t do that if I were you, Adder.” Cool, deep, Heath’s voice cut through the silence in the room.

Standing at the foot of the altar, the naked council leader spun around. Heath stepped out of the shadows, bathed in gold from the torches. Equally naked. But utterly, devastatingly beautiful as he moved.

The rush of relief, of hope, left her dizzy. He wasn’t destroyed. He hadn’t betrayed her. Instead, he’d come back to rescue her. Again, when no other man had ever rescued her.

Her heart stuttered. Soared. Then plunged in fear again. Obviously he carried no weapons. All he had were his body and his strength. But armed men surrounded him, servants of the vampire council. He would be killed. In front of her. For her. And she could do nothing.

Adder turned, obviously aroused by the chance to hurt Heath, for he was even more erect. “Seize him,” he roared. And of course, all the servants pulled out blades. Six rushed toward Heath.

Heath lifted his hands as though preparing to attack. The men flew back as though knocked over by an invisible wave.

She gaped at him … and saw the stunned shock on his face as he stared at his hands. More servants charged, but he lifted his hands again and they flew back, too.

Adder jumped off the stairs, and she knew exactly where the fiend was running.

“Heath!” Her words sounded like a mere whisper to her, but his gaze locked on her. “There’s a knife. On the pedestal.”

Adder leaped through the air to the pedestal. He snatched up the blade, but at the exact instant he started to run toward her, Heath held up his palms again and Adder screamed and flew back. His back slammed into the wall. The knife clattered to the floor. Then, as if controlled by magic, the knife rose, sailed through the air, and landed safely in Heath’s outstretched hands.

In a heartbeat, Heath was at her side. He sliced the ropes that bound her arms. His hands brushed against her bare wrists and set her aflame.

“H—how did you do that?” She could barely hear her voice, but Heath gently lifted her, helping her sit up.

“I have no idea. I’ve never done it before.” He flashed a broad grin. It was filled with wickedness, exactly like the delicious smile he’d worn when he’d watched her come….

“Sarah?” she whispered.

“I’ve already got her out of the cell, Miss Dare. She is safe with Julian. Let’s use this astounding new skill of mine to get us out of here.”

He sliced through the ropes at her ankles in seconds. Blearily she saw the room spin around her as he lifted her into his arms. The vampires were picking themselves up off the floor. But Heath cradled her with one strong arm and used his power to send the vampires tumbling like skittles again. The tall, terrifying vampires tried to stagger forward, but Heath sent them back with another blast.

Then the room seemed to rush at her at top speed and everything blurred around her. Heath was racing so fast she couldn’t see. And when he stopped, she almost fell out of his arms. He set her on her feet. And Sarah was standing right in front of her.

Tears fell to Vivienne’s cheeks and rolled down. She ran to her daughter and buried her face in Sarah’s tangled curls.

She owed Heath so very, very much. How could she ever repay him? Dear heaven, she didn’t care that he was a vampire. He was the most wonderful man she’d ever known.

Heath had no idea what had happened. Where this power had come from, or how he’d controlled it. The first time he’d put up his hand, he’d willed the servants to go back, and suddenly they’d been flying through the air.

He didn’t have time for speculation. They were in a parlor, one ornately decorated in an Eastern style. He hated to break up the embrace between Vivienne and her daughter, but he had no choice. “We have to hurry, ladies. We’ve got to get out of here.”

Sarah pulled away from her mother. And her blanket, which she’d clutched around her, fell to the ground. Her night rail, torn and dirty, hung on her slim body. She shivered. She stooped. “Mama, you should have the blanket.”

But Vivienne, still naked, swept it up and wrapped it around Sarah. Heath swallowed hard. He could barely tear his gaze from Vivienne as she moved. He’d never seen a more enticing woman. Her large breasts swayed, her belly had a beautiful, lush curve, and her derriere—

He was supposed to be saving them. Not admiring the generous globes of Miss Dare’s rump.

“Hold on to it, Sarah,” she whispered. “You’ve nothing but your nightgown, and that’s torn into shreds. You’ll be cold when we get out. And you need to cover yourself. I don’t want anyone to see you so exposed.”

“Mama, we were kidnapped by vampires and rescued by men who weren’t wearing any clothing and look just like Grecian statues. I don’t think I need to worry about propriety.”

Vivienne flushed. She looked almost more disconcerted by her daughter’s observation than she had about being tied to an altar. Wearing a motherly frown, she crossed her arms over her bosom. “You are not going out there without covering.”

Heath had rarely seen a mother actually carry out mothering before. His own had ignored him. His wife had been a wonderful mother, but he’d spent all his time traveling, so he had hardly ever seen the beauty of a mother’s love.

Vivienne’s hands had moved with capable firmness as she wrapped Sarah tighter in the rough brown wool. She cuddled her daughter close. It amazed him how Vivienne’s entire focus was on her daughter after such a hellish ordeal. Sarah had also been through hell, but he could see how Vivienne’s love might just help her to survive it. It brought out a stubborn streak in Sarah, but he saw the way Sarah’s face softened in her mother’s embrace.

He moved with lightning speed to an ottoman and grabbed a silk throw, one edged with long tassels. This one he wrapped around Vivienne’s shoulders. “For you, Miss Dare.”

Then he went to the window and shoved it open. Footsteps thundered down the corridor. Julian had jammed a chair beneath the doorknob, but that wouldn’t slow vampires down.

“Come, Miss Dare. You first.” He held out his hand, helped her leap out the window into the bushes outside. She gave a soft cry of protest as she landed amidst the branches, then fought through them. Sarah stood behind him waiting her turn, but he sent Julian out next, then lowered Sarah into Julian’s arms.

Julian treated Miss Dare’s daughter with delicate care.

Heath jumped out after. And Vivienne, holding the shawl around her, stalked to him.

“How are we going to get away?” she whispered fiercely. “You men are naked, I’m wearing nothing but a scrap of silk shawl, and Sarah’s nightgown is in tatters. We look like we’ve escaped from Bedlam. I have no money to even get us a hackney.”

“Calm yourself, Vivi. I’ll get us to safety.”

“No, Heath, I can’t just calm myself. What is your plan? I can’t just risk Sarah’s life on … on blind faith.”

She couldn’t trust him. He’d saved her life, but it was as though she could see inside him. As though she knew how he had failed his wife and daughter so many years ago.

“We have to get away as swiftly as possible,” he answered tersely. “Julian and I will shape shift, and you and Sarah will have to ride us.”

“Ride you?” Three voices—a soft girl’s, a throaty woman’s, and a stunned vampire’s—all shouted it at him.

“It can be done, Julian. We can change into a bigger creature. It will drain our strength quickly, but we’ll have enough to reach a sanctuary. Then we’ll need to feed. And do it copiously.” He wasn’t certain if the normal substitute—the blood of livestock—would suffice. He was willing to suffer. But Julian …

Julian had never looked more stunned. “Heath, where in hell can we find a sanctuary? We can’t go on hallowed ground. No vampire will defy the council—”

“There’s one who will. Stop asking questions and transform.”

Heath shifted as soon as he finished his command to Julian. His bones rippled, his joints twisted, his rib cage seemed to snap and open wide. Wings erupted. Though his body barely changed in form, his skin darkened to a deep, silvery gray. Vivienne gaped at him as though she was seeing a monster.

After what she had seen, her horror speared him.

The truth was, he was a monster. With his curse, he could destroy all humanity if he turned into a demon. And he would become a demon if he sought the one thing he could never have. Love.

Julian was showing off to Sarah. He flapped his wings and flew in a loop, landing at her feet. Heath expected her to be terrified. Instead she whispered, “I trust you not to drop me.”

Julian grinned. He dropped to one knee. “Your chariot awaits, my lady.”

She giggled shyly, then climbed onto his back. Her legs slid around his waist, her arms wrapped around his neck. Then she gasped as Julian took off and soared into the air. Heath also dropped onto one knee before Vivienne. It sent him back to the moment he had proposed to Ariadne, it made him remember how arrogant he’d been then. Of course she would say yes. How could she not? He’d been so cocksure.

“Trust me, Vivienne,” he said huskily.

“This is madness. How can you fly with me?”

He moved his wings. “Welcome to the world of madness, love. Trust me to be your guide through it.”